I’d consider myself proficient with using a gaiwan now, but I wasn’t for the first few years of my tea journey. I was scared of them.

That’s not going to filter the tea properly. That looks uncomfortable to use. I’m gonna burn myself!

At first, I used tea infusers that sit in your cup. These bothered me for a few reasons: some tea types don’t expand and steep well in a confined space; they clogged constantly; and they can be annoying to clean.

I then took my first baby step towards gaiwans - with an “easy” gaiwan. It was a nicer experience, but still had some of the same issues: it tended to clog and was annoying to clean. It has a lip that is difficult to clean under. And it actually lets quite a bit of tea bits through.

Similar to this one:

After a few years, I got my first gaiwan for cheap, and I’m so glad I did! It was just easier. You can keep the lid mostly closed and it somehow filters tea bits better than my “easy” gaiwan. It’s soooo easy to clean. Now, I do actually use a filter sometimes to catch fine tea dust, but I don’t actually need to.

I’m sure gaiwans are synonymous with loose leaf tea for many people, but they aren’t common where I am in the US. So for anyone who hasn’t tried one, I say give it a try!

– PS - One cool looking kind of teaware I have yet to try is a shiboridashi. This looks like a better version of my “easy” gaiwan:

  • @ffefox
    link
    English
    21 year ago

    Honestly, I don’t really bother making other teas in a gaiwan and I don’t have a clay pot for puer 😅 it’s mostly aesthetic, puer would still work just fine in the 150ml pot. (Though I bet many puer enjoyers would disagree!)

    The spout in the bot has a good filter so it’s actually quite easy to clean! But not as easy as a gaiwan of course since you sometimes have to wipe some stuff off from the inside.

    Luckily my coworkers are all coffee people so I don’t need to share my tea. Quests at home however get a large pot of tea whether they want it or not!